He Was Her Man Character Analysis

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To properly set the appropriate black and white technicolor scene, one must first envision a wide sweep past a luxurious hallway, filled with diligent, yet soulful singing African American laborers. The view suddenly halts, just as the observer peers into a room that which includes a grand vanity and a young, classic woman reflected through the attached mirror. Albeit the neutral color scheme, the unmistakably curly, blonde-haired dame goes by the name “Frankie,” and her dapper dressed male counterpart, “Johnny”. Frankie and Johnny, in reality, are two fictitious characters in Paramount Picture’s short drama film, “He Was Her Man” (1931), starring Gilda Gray and Walter Fenner. As the film’s plot thickens, we see Gilda Gray as Frankie question Johnny’s loyalty to her, thus his constant reaffirmation to Frankie that he will stay “as true to her as the stars above”; Lo and behold, Johnny breaks his vow to Frankie while …show more content…

Gilda Gray’s three divorced marriages displays a type of fleeting romance that is seen often with starlets, past and present. This alludes to a lack of sincerity and compassion among the wealthy and powerful, a point that correlates impeccably with majority of Fitzgerald’s characters in The Great Gatsby. A final parallel between Gilda Gray, The Great Gatsby, and The Roaring Twenties would be its ephemeral presence in societal limelight, as all three figures possessed a ten year expiration date beginning circa 1919 and ending abruptly in 1929. Gray’s many attempts throughout the 40’s and 50’s for a comeback all failed miserably until the day she died, on December 22, 1959, in Hollywood (“Gilda Gray”). This invokes the idea that the ten year-long party, also known as the 20’s, exhibits a grand spectacle that no one, not even it’s inhabitants, can

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